124x Filetype PDF File size 2.07 MB Source: www.worldanimalprotection.org.au
Checking out of cruelty How to end wildlife tourism’s holiday horrors Introduction We want a world where wild animals live in the wild where they belong. But one of the biggest barriers to this natural freedom is global tourism. Up to one quarter of this trillion dollar industry is driven by 1,2 demand for wildlife tourism . What most people don’t know is the unacceptable cruelty and abuse of wild animals used in most wildlife activities. These activities include elephant riding, swimming with captive dolphins, and hugging and posing for photos with lions and tigers. Research carried out by the University of Oxford’s Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU), commissioned by World Animal Protection, has uncovered global suffering caused to up to 550,000 wild animals by irresponsible 3 tourist attractions . They compared expert scientific reviews of wildlife tourism venues with more than 50,000 tourist reviews on TripAdvisor. This revealed that 80% of people left positive 3 reviews for venues that are treating wild animals cruelly . But this doesn’t mean they don’t care about animals. We know that when people are told about the cruelty behind such activities most decide not to go4. Our campaign, Wildlife – not entertainers, is dedicated to ending the unnecessary suffering caused by the cruel wildlife entertainment industry. And our work has already secured the commitment of more than 80 travel companies worldwide to stop selling and promoting elephant rides and shows. But there is still so much more to be done. This report uncovers the cruelty behind irresponsible wildlife tourism. We expose the worst attractions and celebrate the best. We also map out the solutions to developing a wildlife-friendly tourism industry highlighting TripAdvisor’s critical role. 3 The global scale of the problem WildCRU’s research shows that at least 560,000 wild animals are currently in wildlife tourist attractions across the 3 world . Any further research is likely to show the number is even higher, involving millions of wild animals globally. They found that welfare or conservation abuses are happening in approximately three out of every four 3 attractions included in the study . Welfare abuses include being taken from their mothers at a very young age, being beaten and harmed so they can be trained to give rides. They are also forced to perform tricks or remain passive for those ‘all-important’ holiday souvenirs – selfies5. Some of the worst venues include bear, elephant and tiger parks, and a turtle farm. However, it must be celebrated that 25% of all wildlife attractions have a positive impact on the welfare of animals involved. These include sanctuaries that have rescued animals from abusive conditions including wildlife tourist entertainment attractions. At least 13,000 wild animals, including bears, orangutans, elephants and lions, are being cared for in this way. These venues do not provide wildlife 3 shows or allow tourists to directly interact with the animals . 4 5 Wildlife tourism WildCRU used scientific WildCRU identified and methods to assess the assessed 24 different impact of WTAs* on wild WTA* types using objective at a glance animal welfare... scientific methods – + +T Wildlife tourism is a big Wildlife Conservation and growing industry... Research Unit (WildCRU) compared these findings 75% of these WTA 25% of these WTA 75% types are having 25% types are having with the subjective opinions a negative impact a positive impact of tourists 75+Ton wild animals 25on wild animals These negative These positive WTA Globally, tourism is WildCRU assessed 188 WTA types involve types involve only worth over a trillion different venues and an estimated 13,000 wild animals $USD and accounts 51,308 reviews left 550,000 $$$ for 9% of global on TripAdvisor wild animals GDP each year Examples include Examples were all elephant rides, tiger sanctuaries with no selfies and turtle performances and 80% of tourists cannot see farm/handling direct contact (bears, the negative impact a WTA orangutans, lions) 1.8 A growing industry, has on animal welfare it is expected to increase to 1.8 billion billion tourist arrivals each 4 m i l l i o n year by 2030 Some have estimated Wildlife Tourist Attractions Up to 4 million tourists annually visit World Animal (WTAs) constitute approx. the negative welfare Protection estimate 20–40% of global tourism attractions assessed around 110 million in the study people worldwide visit cruel wildlife tourist attractions annually2 worldanimalprotection.org/customer-not-always-right 6 Wildlife Tourist Attractions 7 **
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